British Columbia Libertarian Party

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The British Columbia Libertarian Party is a libertarian party in British Columbia, Canada, that nominated its first candidates in the 1986 provincial election. There has never been a Libertarian elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, and they have been termed a fringe party.[1] In the 2020 British Columbia general election the party fielded 25 candidates and received 8,360 votes, or 0.4% of the popular vote. Keith Macintyre received 2.6% of votes in Penticton. In 2024, the party fielded only four candidates.[2]

Officers of the party

In 2021, Keith MacIntyre was elected as party leader, Sandra Filosof-Schipper as deputy leader with Clayton Welwood remaining as party president. Dylan Davidson was named Party Treasurer, Brandi McLauchlan as Party Secretary and Rachel Whitehouse, Maizy Thorvaldson and Josh Hardy as executive directors.[3][4]

Values

The BC Libertarian Party adopted private property rights extending from self-ownership and scarcity, and advocated for the creation of a British Columbia Constitution to enshrines and protects property rights.[5] They also stand for free speech except in cases of fraud or violence.[5] It adopts the Austrian School of Economics model, and rejects all government monopolies and rejects collective ownership of resources.[5] It promotes decentralisation – subsidiarity, secession, nullification, and localism – of political units down to the individual as a means of expanding choice and competition in governance for all individuals. It also rejects Federal infringement into areas of Provincial jurisdiction, seeking constitutional reform on the division of powers failing which it proposes secession.[5]

In 2020, the Libertarian Party pledged their support for ending the ICBC monopoly on basic auto insurance, [6] and allowing for more parental and student choice in education,[7] decentralizing decision-making powers to local communities, families, and individuals.[8] Abolishing provincial government monopoly on liquor and cannabis distribution.[9] Adapting to a changing climate and promoting environmental policies that will have the greatest impact.[10] Sweeping tax policy reform, including tripling the basic income tax exemption to $35,000 and abolishing the carbon, fuel, cigarette, liquor, and marijuana taxes.[11] Reducing transportation costs through the elimination of various taxes and regulatory bodies, and opening up the market to new innovations like car sharing, bike sharing, ride sharing, and other transportation solutions.[12] Removing legal barriers to ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft.Template:Fact

Election results

Election results
Election year Party leader No. of
overall votes
% of
overall total
No. of
candidates run
No. of
seats won
Presence
1986 341 0.02 3 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
1991 860 0.06 11 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
1996 2,041 0.13% 17 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
2001 0 0% 0 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
2005 1,053 0.06% 6 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
2009 1,486 0.09% 6 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
2013 Clayton Welwood[13] 2,050 0.11% 8 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
2017 7,743 0.39% 30 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
2020 Donald Wilson[4] 8,360 0.44% 25 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated
2024 Alex Joehl 1,337 0.07% 4 Template:Composition bar Template:Eliminated

2024 candidates

  • Alex Joehl, Langley-Abbotsford, who noted that "Libertarian principles are ingrained in us before preschool – don't hurt people, don't take their stuff".[14][15] Joehl had previously run in municipal, provincial and federal elections.[16] Received 192 votes for 0.76%.[17]
  • Damyn Tassie, Surrey-White Rock, who opined that "excessive regulation and taxation are inhibiting our productivity and undermining our ability to cultivate a sustainable economy".[15][18] Received 646 votes for 2.38%[17]
  • Robert Johnson, Vernon-Lumby has described his campaign as a "court jester" hoping to highlight follies of the system, and acknowledged his political naivete but opposes government overreach and feels individuals should be allowed to live their lives free of government interference.[15][19][20] Received 259 votes for 0.95%.[17][21]

References

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  3. https://lims.leg.bc.ca/hdms/file/Committees/42nd2nd/rpea/20210526pm-ElectionActReview-Virtual-n6.pdf
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  13. https://www.elections.bc.ca/docs/init/Registered-Political-Parties-Information.pdf
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  15. a b c d https://elections.bc.ca/2024-provincial-election/candidate-list/
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External links

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